In our Three year old classroom, children are introduced to the Montessori program through a variety of hands-on activities in a prepared environment.
- Practical Life- Practical life activities encourage the child to take care of the environment with size-appropriate tools. The children care for the outside environment through gardening activities and for the inside environment through dusting, mopping, sweeping and washing dishes. The preschooler is also directed to take care of himself by washing hands, hanging up clothing, managing personal items and toileting.
- Cognitive Skills- The preschooler is encouraged to explore books and perform various jobs that ultimately increase his ability to concentrate and work independently while creating foundations for learning.
- Motor Skills- The preschooler is refining both fine motor skills and gross motor skills. Fine motor skills are heightened through practical life activities such as pouring, sorting, etc. Gross motor skills are heightened in physical activities like rhythm/music movement and outdoor play.
- Language Skills- Language activities are developing at a rapid rate during the preschooler years. Sandpaper letters help the child learn the phonetics of the alphabet. Naming cards and matching introduce foundations for alphabet and language. Stories, finger plays, singing, and spontaneous conversation time encourage both social and language skills.
- Math Skills- The preschooler uses hands-on materials for learning concrete math concepts. The toddler begins to understand number concepts, both quantity and symbol, and the meaning of zero. The child also begins to understand language used in performing simple single-digit addition.
- Sensorial Skills- The preschooler is able to discover and explore the world around her through her five senses.
- Science- The preschooler learns about the environment through the use of “trial and error.”
- Geography- Lessons in geography introduce the concept of a globe and create a framework for whole-world to self-world learning.
- Art- The preschooler is able to use various materials to express creativity and to enhance fine motor skills. Language skills are further reinforced through the child’s description of the art and its personal meaning. Social skills particular to gift-giving are introduced and coordinated with traditional holidays.
- Sign Language- The use of sign language in the preschooler program helps the child express needs in a non-verbal manner. This can help reduce the frustration level of the child who is in the earliest stages of verbal expression.
The Universal Pre-Kindergarten Program (UPK) and the Three year old Preschool Program (3PK) is a state-funded program for which the Administration of the Auburn Enlarged City School District applies each year. The Montessori School of the Finger Lakes is one of the approved sites in the district that contract with the administration to provide one year of full-day preschool to eligible children.
Parents/guardians of children who reach the age of four or three by December 1st and who live within the district are eligible to apply. Grants acceptance is solely determined by the administration of the Auburn Enlarged City School District.
Applications are available through the Harriet Tubman Administration Office at 78 Thornton Avenue in Auburn in the spring for the following school year.